Preston v. Farmers Irrigation District

293 N.W. 343, 138 Neb. 504, 1940 Neb. LEXIS 154
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1940
DocketNo. 30933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 293 N.W. 343 (Preston v. Farmers Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preston v. Farmers Irrigation District, 293 N.W. 343, 138 Neb. 504, 1940 Neb. LEXIS 154 (Neb. 1940).

Opinion

Johnsen, J.

Plaintiff sued for damages to his crops and land, in the sum of $2,656.74, occasioned by defendant’s failure to make delivery of irrigation water under his preferred water-right contract. On the first trial, the jury awarded him damages of only $118.75, and plaintiff appealed. The judgment was reversed for inadequacy of amount, and the case was remanded for a new trial. Preston v. Farmers Irrigation District, 134 Neb. 503, 279 N. W. 298. On the second trial, plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for $1,477.50, and defendant has appealed.

The nature of the rights vested in plaintiff, as the holder of a preferred water-right contract, is discussed in Vonburg v. Farmers Irrigation District, 132 Neb. 12, 270 N. W. 835, and Ledingham v. Farmers Irrigation District, 135 Neb. 276, 281 N. W. 20. By the terms of plaintiff’s contract, defendant, through assignment and succession, agreed to convey and deliver to plaintiff, at any point along defendant’s canal, not more than forty miles from the diversion point in the North Platte river, “eighty square inches of water, continually flowing through and during the irrigation season of each and every year * * * in perpetuity,” which right was to be “forever free from any and all assessments or taxes of any nature or for any purpose whatsoever.” It was provided also that the holders of the preferred watertight contracts could not be required to prorate with subsequent stockholders in the canal, and that defendant would hold plaintiff “harmless and free from loss and damages through or by any neglect whatsoever * * * to deliver the water, as hereinbefore covenanted and agreed.”

Defendant’s canal is approximately eighty miles in length, but all the lands to which the water under the preferred-right contracts is applied are located within the first twenty [506]*506miles of its course. The controversy here involved arises out of the fact that in 1934, by virtue of a water shortage in the North Platte river, defendant undertook to require the holders of the preferred rights to prorate with 'those having subordinate rights along the canal. In Vonburg v. Farmers Irrigation District, supra, this was held to be a violation of the vested rights of the holders of the preferred water-right contracts.

The first contention urged by defendant as a ground for reversal is that plaintiff did not prove that there was a sufficient supply of water to have enabled him, together with the other preferred-right holders, to have received the quantity to which he was entitled under his contract, and that the verdict therefore is not supported by the evidence and is contrary to law. There was evidence on the part of plaintiff to show that, with the exception of a few days in July and August, the supply of natural-flow water in defendant’s canal during the irrigation season was equal to or exceeded the amount which the preferred-right holders were entitled to have delivered to them under their contracts. Plaintiff’s position was that, by rotation with the other preferred-right holders during this period, as they would have done, he could have received his full supply of water throughout the irrigation season, except for two or three days in July and August, had defendant not arbitrarily denied it to him. Defendant insists, however, that, whatever the quantity of water in the canal may have been, plaintiff did not attempt to prove the amount of the probable carriage loss from evaporation and seepage, and so did not establish what the actual amount of natural-flow water was that could have been delivered to him, and that he therefore did not sustain the burden of proof which rested upon him.

Ft. Lyon Canal Co. v. Bennett, 61 Colo. 111, 156 Pac. 604, is cited in support of defendant’s contention. In that case it was said: “Whether there was a sufficient volume of water in the canal at the time plaintiffs needed it was a vital issue * * * upon which they had the burden of proof.” [507]*507That was an action in tort, against a third party with whom no contractual privity existed, for negligent interference with a lateral that led from the water canal to plaintiff’s lands. Here, the action is one for breach of a contract to deliver water, in which defendant seeks to justify nonperformance, in part at least, on the ground of a “supervening impossibility” (Restatement, Contracts, sec. 457), in the nature of what is sometimes loosely referred to as a “vis major” or an “act of God.” The burden of exonerating itself from the obligation of a contract on such a ground rests on the defendant. Buel v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 81 Neb. 430, 116 N. W. 299. An irrigation company which seeks, on the ground of a supervening impossibility, to excuse its failure to deliver water pursuant to the terms of its contract obligation is within the operation of this rule. 3 Kinney, Irrigation and Water Rights (2d ed.) 3124, sec. 1693; 67 C. J. 1438, note 67; 15 R. C. L. 481, sec. 34. In this case, therefore, the burden rested upon defendant, and not on plaintiff, to show the quantity of water that it was possible to have delivered to him after taking into account all pertinent factors, including carriage loss from evaporation and seepage. Plaintiff established a prima facie case when he proved defendant’s failure to deliver the quantity of water required by his contract and the extent of the damage to his crops and land from the failure to receive such a supply.

In Tapper v. Idaho Irrigation Co., Ltd., 36 Idaho, 78, 98, 210 Pac. 591, 597, the court said: “The appellants made a prima facie case by proving the contract and failure to deliver water in accordance with its terms and consequent damages to their clops together with the amount thereof. It was incumbent dpon respondent to prove the failure of the water supply on account of an extraordinary drouth, and also that it delivered to appellants their just proportion of the water supply which it had.” There are a number of other Idaho cases to the same effect. Edholm v. Idaho Irrigation Co., Ltd., 37 Idaho, 116, 214 Pac. 1036; Preis v. Idaho Irrigation Co., Ltd., 37 Idaho, 109, 215 Pac. 466; [508]*508Meservy v. Idaho Irrigation Co., Ltd., 37 Idaho, 227, 217 Pac. 595. We would not go the length of holding, as does the Idaho court, that only an extraordinary drouth will excuse the failure to perform such an unconditional contract, because the sources and conditions of water supply in this state probably require, as a matter of implied contemplation and reasonable construction, that we recognize as a supervening impossibility, excusing nonperformance, any natural failure of water supply, where the irrigation company is not in contributing fault, unless there is other controlling language in the contract. But this, of course, does not affect the application of the rule with respect to burden of proof.

We accordingly hold that plaintiff was not required to produce proof of the extent of the carriage loss in defendant’s-canal, in order to sustain the burden of proof which rested upon him in this case. Defendant, as a matter of fact, offered evidence on the point, in an effort to convince the jury that it could not legitimately have furnished plaintiff more water than it did; but the testimony of its expert was based upon factors of judgment and opinion, and not upon demonstrated measurements of evaporation and seepage losses, so that it was not conclusive upon the jury. Defendant attempted to prove also what it considered was the extent of plaintiff’s legitimate damages.

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Bluebook (online)
293 N.W. 343, 138 Neb. 504, 1940 Neb. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-v-farmers-irrigation-district-neb-1940.